Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Atterberg’s Dollar Symphony Escapism

    Atterberg’s Dollar Symphony Escapism

    As the tax panic takes hold today, here’s a little musical escapism – the “Dollar Symphony” by the Swedish composer Kurt Atterberg.

    In 1928, Atterberg entered his Symphony No. 6 into a contest held by the Columbia Record Company in honor of the 100th anniversary of the death of Franz Schubert. He was awarded the first prize of $10,000. The work became known as the “Dollar Symphony.” It remains the composer’s most frequently-recorded piece, beginning with a commercial recording by Sir Thomas Beecham and a recorded broadcast by Arturo Toscanini.

    Atterberg was the winner of the international competition. In case you’re curious, divisional winners (by “zone”) included the now-forgotten English composer John St. Anthony Johnson, for his work, “Pax Vobiscum,” and the equally-forgotten American Charles Haubiel, for a piece called “Karma.”

    Franz Schmidt was recognized in Austria, for his Symphony No. 3. Havergal Brian won second prize in England, for the first three movements of his “Gothic Symphony.”

    You can find all the details here:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1928_International_Columbia_Graphophone_Competition

    I don’t know, maybe you’re getting money back. If that’s the case, either you’ve got a good accountant, or you’re not a freelancer.

  • John Cage’s 4’33” for Orchestra? Mind Blown

    John Cage’s 4’33” for Orchestra? Mind Blown

    I hadn’t realized until last night that John Cage transcribed “4’ 33”” for orchestra. I wonder if anyone ever thought to program this as an encore to Mahler’s “Symphony of a Thousand?”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zY7UK-6aaNA

  • Robert Stallman on The Lost Chord

    Robert Stallman on The Lost Chord

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” I’ll be joined by flutist Robert Stallman, who will talk about his new album, “Cosi fan Flauti,” recently issued on the Bogner’s Café label.

    On top of a lifetime of experience as a performer, Stallman (a former pupil of Jean-Pierre Rampal) has an unusually intimate knowledge of the scores of Mozart, having transcribed some 50 of his works for other combinations involving the flute. A superb album of “new” quintets for flute and strings, derived from some of the piano sonatas, was met with great acclaim upon its release in 2006, in large part for Stallman’s idiomatic grasp of the composer’s method. He went on to perform the same service for Franz Schubert, having arranged some 40 of his works, several of which were issued on another album in 2009.

    The centerpiece of his most recent issue is a new “Sinfonia Concertante” for two flutes and orchestra, based on a two-piano sonata, which Stallman transcribed and then had his friend, the English composer Stephen Dodgson (a descendent of Charles Dodgson, a.k.a. Lewis Carroll), orchestrate. We’ll be listening to this reimagining of Mozart’s original, as well as Dodgson’s own Concerto for Flute and Strings, which was dedicated to Stallman and recorded for the Biddulph Recordings label, back in 1994.

    Also on the new album is Mozart’s Concerto for Flute and Harp (with Stallman’s own cadenzas) and two selections from the “Haffner Serenade” performed on the flute.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Cosi fan Flauti,” this Sunday night at 10 ET, with a repeat Wednesday evening at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

  • Chamber Music Blooms in Princeton & Beyond

    Chamber Music Blooms in Princeton & Beyond

    Chamber music concerts are springing up like daffodils this weekend.

    Concordia Chamber Players will present its final subscription concert of the season – with music by Frank Bridge, Dmitri Shostakovich and Gabriel Fauré – Sunday at 3 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church in Solebury, Pa.

    Soprello – consisting of soprano Allison Pohl and Princeton Symphony Orchestra cellist Alistair MacRae – will perform music by Henry Purcell, Rick Sowash, Steven Gerber, David Dzubay, Gilbert & Sullivan, John Tavener and Robert Schumann, Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in Wolfensohn Hall at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. (The program will be repeated at Monroe Township Public Library, Monday at 1 p.m.)

    The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center – in its current incarnation of Daniel Hope, violin; Paul Neubauer, viola; David Finckel, cello; and Wu Han piano – will appear Monday at 7:30 p.m. at McCarter Theatre Center in Princeton. The concert will include piano quartets by Mahler, Schumann and Brahms.

    You can read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/04/classical_music_concordia_cham.html#incart_related_stories

    Also, don’t forget: Lenape Chamber Ensemble will perform music by Mozart, George Rochberg and Max Bruch, tonight at 8:15 p.m. at Upper Tinicum Lutheran Church in Upper Black Eddy, Pa., and Sunday at 3 p.m. at Delaware Valley College in Doylestown.

    This was covered in last week’s article:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/03/classical_music_concerts_in_pr.html


    PHOTO: Pickles the Fox likes daffodils. More wildlife photos by Matt Binstead of the British Wildlife Centre here: http://mattbinstead.blogspot.com/.

  • Fantastic 18th Century Adventures in Film

    Fantastic 18th Century Adventures in Film

    The Enlightenment isn’t exactly remembered for its flights of fancy. If the odd novel embraced a fantastic tone, it was frequently in the service of satire, an entertaining means to send-up contemporary mores and pursuits or to poke fun at authority figures and good old reliable human frailty. This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll explore a few of these fantastic adventures of the 18th century.

    “The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen” (1785) pokes fun at a real-life German nobleman and veteran of the Russo-Turkish War, one Hieronymus Karl Friedrich, Freiherr von Münchhausen, whose reputation for telling outrageous tall tales was lampooned by Rudolf Erich Raspe. Raspe, fearing a libel suit, published the work anonymously, with the result that it was commonly believed that the Baron had actually dictated the tales himself. Naturally, Munchausen was upset by the unwanted attention. The name “Munchausen” has come down through the centuries to describe feigned illness and pathological lying.

    The book has been adapted to film several times, beginning with a silent version by Georges Méliès, all the way back in 1911. We’ll be hearing music from two subsequent adaptations. The first, titled simply “Münchhausen” (1943), is undeniably entertaining and exceptionally well-made. However, underlying a sense of enjoyment is a kind of unease in the knowledge that the film was a pet project of Joseph Goebbels, who wanted to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the UFA film studio by producing a lavish spectacle worthy to stand toe-to-toe with foreign efforts like “The Wizard of Oz” and “The Thief of Bagdad.”

    Considering the source, one would have to look awfully hard to come up with anything resembling Nazi propaganda. The entire exercise comes across as a pastoral escape from the horrors of totalitarianism, total war and the Final Solution. The elegant music, by Georg Haentzschel, would not be out of place in the concert hall. Haentzschel is regarded as perhaps the last representative of a generation of Middle European light music composers.

    More than 40 years later, director Terry Gilliam undertook another production design-driven adaptation that resembled a series of Doré illustrations brought to life. Contrary to received wisdom, “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen” (1988) managed to pull in a respectable amount of per-screen capital. Ultimately, the film was a casualty of a management turnover at Columbia Pictures, with the new regime eager to bury the projects of the old. Therefore, it was never seen theatrically beyond a very limited release. The score, by Michael Kamen, while in a romantic heroic style, wittily contains abundant allusions to music of the 18th century.

    “The Manuscript Found in Saragossa” (1805) is a transitional work, with its ecstatically lurid opening chapter – replete with gypsy storytellers, highwaymen, dueling skeletons, lesbian vampires and a couple of corpses dangling in a gibbet – dragging the Enlightenment kicking and screaming into the Romantic age. It starts out as a masterpiece of surrealism by way of Gothic convention, with the spell eventually broken, sadly, by a large cold bucket of Enlightenment water in the form of a perfectly rational explanation at the end. But until then, the author, Jan Potocki, gets an A for effort. The interlocking structure, with stories inside stories inside stories looks ahead to postmodern experiments by writers like Italo Calvino and John Barth, to say nothing of Jorge Luis Borges.

    The book was made into an acclaimed Polish film, “The Saragossa Manuscript,” in 1965. Its cult status led to a restoration financed by Jerry Garcia, Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola that was released on VHS and DVD in 2001.

    Who else could provide the perfect soundtrack to such a hallucinogenic experience but Krzysztof Penderecki? Penderecki intersperses spooky passages with neo-classical and baroque interludes.

    Finally, we’ll have music from one of the many adaptations of Jonathan Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels” (1726). “The Three Worlds of Gulliver” (1960) simplifies the book’s narrative and dispenses with a great deal of the misanthropic humor in favor of children’s fantasy. You won’t catch Gulliver extinguishing a fire in the Lilliputian Emperor’s palace with his urine in this version. What you will find is a good deal of technical wizardry and a delightful score by Bernard Herrmann.

    I hope you’ll join me for music from fantastic 18th century adventures this week, on “Picture Perfect” – music from the movies – this Friday evening at 6 ET, with a repeat Saturday morning at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: Munchausen hitches a ride on a cannonball

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